In the summer of 2009, John Anari, a young political activist from the Indonesian region of West Papua, created a Facebook page. He did it using an old desktop computer with a dial-up Internet connection, in a one-room apartment in Manokwari, the provincial capital situated on West Papua's northeastern coast. The page wasn't a personal profile. Anari, who prides himself on being tech savvy, had created one of those the year before. The page was the first of what would become several online outposts for the West Papua Liberation Organization (WPLO), a group that Anari had founded to agitate for his homeland's independence.
"Most freedom groups in Papua cannot access the Internet or don't know how to use it," Anari, now 35, said recently. "I wanted to show the world Indonesia's crimes."
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